Tech Blog
AnnouncementsSometimes, tech just p*$$#$ me off!
I consider myself a fairly tech savvy guy, and have been for most of my
life. I'm a fair hand with a soldering iron, can read resistance bands
if required, and have hardware modded my original Xbox to be a
way-too-cool media centre, but that's another story.As I've
said, I usually understand tech. Except for the times when I don't.
Like this evening. But I don't think it's entirely my fault.It's a holiday, let's watch a movieA
long weekend ends, so it seemed the perfect night to crack my
spanky-new Blu-Ray copy of Monsters VS Aliens -- a movie I thoroughly
enjoyed at the cinema in 3D.Sadly, It didn't happen. Instead,
my evening was spent trying to get the video to play smoothly on my one
year old Sony Vaio laptop. This same laptop has played other blu-ray
movies perfectly, including piping them out the Vaio's HDMI port to my
entertainment system. In the past, everything worked fine. Tonight, no.After
hooking up the laptop to the entertainment centre and loading the disc,
the playback software informed me that I 'should' download the latest
'keys' (hello DRM) to ensure all features would
work. Of course, the software didn't tell me that before downloading
the keys, I'd have to register my email, name, postal code, first
born's name, etc.Ok, fine, not a big deal to hand over some
personal information to a nameless company to release the keys which
unlock the movie I'd already paid for. Fine. Done. Make the popcorn 'cause the movie's about to start.And
it did...right up to the opening scene after the first menu. Then the
video started freezing, and the audio dropped out. Hmmm. Everything was
the same. I'd not changed one setting since we'd played the last movie
a few months back."Have you looked for an update to the player software," my lovely wife pipes in from the couch.Doh. 10 minutes later, I had the one-month-old update to the blu-ray player software installed.Now, let's watch that video...Nope, no change, still freezing and stuttering.What else had changed? Well, since the video worked flawlessly a couple of months ago, lots could have changed.Microsoft patches happen weekly, so there's at least 8 updates that could have modified settings without me knowingI've installed new anti-virus softwareI've updated a number of utility and productivity programsI waxed the catFrankly,
it could be anything! And it'll likely take me a week of searching the
interwebs to find a number of partial solutions that may or may not
work.After a bit of thought, it may be best to simply make a
new boot partition that contains the original Vaio disc image, and use
it only for Blu-Ray playback. I can easily make other partitions for
Windows 7 and use that for my main work.But aside from the lost time and extra work, here's why I'm frustrated.This
shouldn't be rocket science. I can watch any number of DVDs or videos
downloaded from the internet via YouTube, why is it so hard for me to
play a purchased Blu-Ray disc on my computer -- a computer made by the
company that invented Blu-Ray? Or maybe I'm just being unreasonable for expecting technology to 'just work'. And it's not isolated to this situation...you should see what I thought about the first few version if iTunes I worked with...oi! But back to the topic of tech-frustration. What do you think? Am I dumb or do you have a 'pet peeve' with tech, design, etc?
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